1. An ALMA survey of the S2CLS UDS field: optically invisible submillimetre galaxies
- Author
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A. M. Swinbank, Fabian Walter, Rob Ivison, Jacqueline Hodge, Douglas Scott, Jack Birkin, Julie Wardlow, Alasdair Thomson, U. Dudzevičiūtė, Chian-Chou Chen, S. M. Stach, Ian Smail, Omar Almaini, Chris Simpson, P. van der Werf, S. Ikarashi, James E. Geach, B. Gullberg, and Scott Chapman
- Subjects
Infrared ,Evolution ,Population ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Formation ,Astrophysics ,Total population ,01 natural sciences ,Submillimetre ,0103 physical sciences ,education ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Observations ,Physics ,education.field_of_study ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Star formation ,Attenuation ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Atacama Large Millimeter Array ,Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Redshift ,Galaxy ,Cosmology ,Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) - Abstract
We analyse a robust sample of 30 near-infrared-faint (K>25.3, 5 sigma) submillimetre galaxies selected across a 0.96 deg^2 field, to investigate their properties and the cause of their lack of detectable optical/near-infrared emission. Our analysis exploits precise identifications based on ALMA 870um continuum imaging, combined with the very deep near-infrared imaging from the UKIDSS-UDS survey. We estimate that K>25.3 submillimetre galaxies represent 15+/-2 per cent of the total population brighter than S870=3.6mJy, with an expected surface density of ~450/deg^2 above S870>1mJy. As such they pose a source of contamination in surveys for both high-redshift "quiescent" galaxies and very-high-redshift Lyman-break galaxies. We show that these K-faint submillimetre galaxies are simply the tail of the broader submillimetre population, with comparable dust and stellar masses to K, 9 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to MNRAS, comments welcome
- Published
- 2021